A Rare Thick Greyish-Green Jade Bird-Form Pendant
A Rare Thick Greyish-Green Jade Bird-Form Pendant

SHANG/EARLY WESTERN ZHOU DYNASTY, CIRCA 1100 BC

Details
A Rare Thick Greyish-Green Jade Bird-Form Pendant
Shang/Early Western Zhou dynasty, circa 1100 BC
Well carved in the round as a bird with folded wings seen in profile, with short hooked beak and upturned crest bifurcated by a notch corresponding to one in the flat back of the head, the details of the head, wings and tail delineated by double grooves, the back flat except for the indented center section which is simply carved with curved double lines indicating feathers, the lower body tapering towards the bottom tab which is pierced from both sides, the stone of even greyish-green tone with minimal opaque white mottling
3 1/16in. (7.8cm.) high, box and stand
Falk Collection no. 501.
Provenance
Mathias Komor, New York, March 1949.
Exhibited
Small Sculpture, Shang Through Sung Dynasties, New York, Chinese Art Society, 1954, no. 5.
On loan: The Metropolitan Museum of Art, 1965, [L65.46.4].
Art Styles of Ancient Shang, from Private and Museum Collections, New York, China House Gallery, China Institute in America, 1967, no. 59.

Lot Essay

This well-carved jade bird is unusual in its thickness. As with other bird pendants of the late Shang period, it has a short hooked beak, prominent chest and bent legs. The crest on the head sweeps back and then up at the tip, while that on a related green jade bird pendant of slightly smaller size excavated in 1976 from the Tomb of Fu Hao, Yinxu, Anyang, Henan province, is upright and notched in the center. See Yeung Kin-Fong, Zhongguo chutu guyu, vol. 1, Chinese University Press, Hong Kong, 1987, pl. XIII:4, and p. 237. On this latter figure the details of the wings appear to be in linear relief, rather than delineated in fine double grooves as on the Falk figure. Another related, but more simply carved, bird pendant of yellowish-green color excavated in 1980 in Shaanxi province, which also appears to be quite thick, is illustrated in Zhongguo meishu yuqi, vol. 2, Hebei, 1993, p. 118, pl. 165. Both of these examples have a concave back, while another thick jade bird pendant in the collection of Sir Joseph Hotung, illustrated by R. Krahl, Chinese Jades from the Neolithic to the Qing, London, 1995, p. 218, no. 12:14, has the wings and tail projecting from the back of the figure.
One of the interesting features of the Falk bird pendant is how accentuated the concave curve of the back is. When held in the hand, with the bird's head enclosed in the palm, the thumb fits very comfortably in the curve of the back.

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